Aid workers battling an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo are now having to fend off a spike in malaria cases at the same time.

Experts say people suffering from Ebola and malaria are becoming mixed up, making it more difficult to control the fast-spreading virus.

The African country's Ebola outbreak, which began in August, is showing no signs of slowing down and 19 more people died this week, bringing the death toll to 242.

And the number of people catching malaria has spiked this year in the North Kivu province where the outbreak is happening – there are now 2,000 cases a week.

Some 242 people are now believed to have died in the Democratic Republic of the Congo's Ebola outbreak, which has infected 422 people – 375 of the infection cases have been confirmed as Ebola, as have 195 of the deaths

Health workers say half of people turning up at medical centres with suspected Ebola actually just have malaria, but the Ebola outbreak is spreading this way when people go near infected areas (pictured: a health worker preparing to give out an Ebola vaccine)

Many children are catching the incurable fever when visiting medical centres with malaria, and half of people suspected of having Ebola actually just had malaria.

'It will make things a lot easier if malaria is taken out of the equation,' said Stefan Hoyer of the World Health Organization (WHO).

Health workers in the city of Beni, at the centre of the outbreak, have a launched a four-day door-to-door blitz to try and stem the flow of malaria cases.

They will be giving out mosquito nets and anti-malarial drugs to 450,000 people to stop them going to medical centres where they may catch Ebola.

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The WHO thinks it can cut Ebola cases in half by separating the two groups of patients.

North Kivu province, in the north-east of DRC, has seen an eight-fold increase in cases of malaria since last year, and now sees 2,000 cases a week.

And the country is the second worst in the world for malaria, second only to Nigeria.

Mr Hoyer said there were no more mosquito-blocking bed nets left in North Kivu, an eastern province that is battling both conflict and disease.

The World Health Organization hopes the number of Ebola cases will reduce by half if people without the infection stop going to medical centres where they are using up resources and exposing themselves to the virus (pictured: health workers in the city of Beni)

An unusually high number of children have been infected in this outbreak, officials say – pictured, a worker carries a swaddled four-day-old baby thought to have caught the virus

Malaria can normally be diagnosed with a rapid blood test, but the risk of transmitting Ebola through blood means health workers have to rely on an assessment of symptoms, he said.

This normally results in an over-reported number of cases – but not as many as eight times more, Mr Hoyer added.

Starting on Wednesday, health workers planned to go door-to-door for four days delivering mosquito nets and anti-malarial drugs.

The aim is to treat people who already have malaria and prevent it spreading, freeing up resources to focus on the more serious disease, it said.

'We can assume that the suspected Ebola cases to be triaged would at least go down by half,' Mr Hoyer added.

HAS THE DRC HAD AN EBOLA OUTBREAK BEFORE?

DRC escaped the brutal Ebola pandemic that began in 2014, which was finally declared over in January 2016 - but it was struck by a smaller outbreak last year.

Four DRC residents died from the virus in 2017. The outbreak lasted just 42 days and international aid teams were praised for their prompt responses.

The new outbreak is the DRC’s tenth since the discovery of Ebola in the country in 1976, named after the river. The outbreak earlier this summer was its ninth.

Health experts credit an awareness of the disease among the population and local medical staff's experience treating for past successes containing its spread.

DRC’s vast, remote geography also gives it an advantage, as outbreaks are often localised and relatively easy to isolate.

This is what happened in Sierra Leone's capital, Freetown, when people with malaria were filling Ebola treatment centres during the West African outbreak in 2014, he said.

The treatment of Ebola itself has taken an experimental turn in DRC, where scientists are now conducting a real-time study of how well pioneering drugs work.

More than 160 people there have already been treated with the drugs, and the way people are treated won't change, but scientists will now be able to compare them.

The announcement came after two devastating weeks in which the death rate has been high and officials confirmed even newborn babies are catching the virus.

Four experimental drugs are being used to try and combat the disease – mAb 114, ZMapp, Remdesivir and Regeneron.

Patients will get one of the four, but researchers won't know which they were given until after the study.

By comparing how well these work, scientists will be moving towards curing the disease and slashing the death tolls in future outbreaks.

'While our focus remains on bringing this outbreak to an end, the launch of the randomised control trial is an important step toward finally finding an Ebola treatment that will save lives,' said WHO director-general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

Because the data collected in the North Kivu epidemic is unlikely to be sufficient for a complete study, the country's health ministry said the clinical trial may extend over a five-year period to cover Ebola outbreaks in other countries.

'Our country is struck with Ebola outbreaks too often, which also means we have unique expertise in combatting it,' said DRC's minister of health Dr Oly Ilunga Kalenga.

'These trials will contribute to building that knowledge, while we continue to respond on every front to bring the current outbreak to an end.'

The outbreak has been plagued by security problems, with health workers attacked by rebels in districts where the virus has been spreading.

Of the 422 people thought to have been infected with Ebola during the DRC's outbreak, 375 of those have been confirmed – pictured, medical workers at the Doctors Without Borders treatment centre in Butembo help a patient whose illness has not been confirmed

Health workers had to be evacuated from their hotel after it was hit by a shell in a nearby armed rebel attack earlier this month.

Some 16 World Health Organization staff were taken out of the city of Beni.

The organisation's director general said he heard 'heavy gunfire' over the phone, and a shell hit the workers' hotel but didn't explode.

Violence is common in the central African country and has made it difficult to stop the Ebola outbreak – earlier in the same week eight United Nations peacekeepers and 12 local soldiers died in an ambush.

Armed groups have kidnapped and killed people trying to treat the sick, and ongoing conflict has made locals suspicious of official health workers.

Dr Ghebreyesus added: 'We honour the memory of those who have died battling this outbreak, and deplore the continuing threats on the security of those still working to end it.'

Because of the difficulties facing health workers, experts have warned the epidemic is likely to rage on into the middle of next year.

WHAT IS EBOLA AND HOW DEADLY IS IT?

Ebola, a haemorrhagic fever, killed at least 11,000 across the world after it decimated West Africa and spread rapidly over the space of two years.

That epidemic was officially declared over back in January 2016, when Liberia was announced to be Ebola-free by the WHO.

The country, rocked by back-to-back civil wars that ended in 2003, was hit the hardest by the fever, with 40 per cent of the deaths having occurred there.

Sierra Leone reported the highest number of Ebola cases, with nearly of all those infected having been residents of the nation.

WHERE DID IT BEGIN?

An analysis, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, found the outbreak began in Guinea - which neighbours Liberia and Sierra Leone.

A team of international researchers were able to trace the epidemic back to a two-year-old boy in Meliandou - about 400 miles (650km) from the capital, Conakry.

Emile Ouamouno, known more commonly as Patient Zero, may have contracted the deadly virus by playing with bats in a hollow tree, a study suggested.

HOW MANY PEOPLE WERE STRUCK DOWN?

WHICH COUNTRIES WERE STRUCK DOWN BY EBOLA DURING THE 2014-16 EPIDEMIC? (CDC figures)

COUNTRY

CASES

DEATHS

DEATH RATE (%)

GUINEA

3,814

2,544

66.7%

SIERRA LEONE

14,124

3,956

28.0%

LIBERIA

10,678

4,810

45.0%

NIGERIA

20

8

40.0%

SENEGAL

1

0

N/A

SPAIN

1

0

N/A

US

4

1

25.0%

MALI

8

6

75.0%

UK

1

0

N/A

ITALY

1

0

N/A

Figures show nearly 29,000 people were infected from Ebola - meaning the virus killed around 40 per cent of those it struck.

Cases and deaths were also reported in Nigeria, Mali and the US - but on a much smaller scale, with 15 fatalities between the three nations.

Health officials in Guinea reported a mysterious bug in the south-eastern regions of the country before the WHO confirmed it was Ebola.

Ebola was first identified by scientists in 1976, but the most recent outbreak dwarfed all other ones recorded in history, figures show.

HOW DID HUMANS CONTRACT THE VIRUS?

Scientists believe Ebola is most often passed to humans by fruit bats, but antelope, porcupines, gorillas and chimpanzees could also be to blame.

It can be transmitted between humans through blood, secretions and other bodily fluids of people - and surfaces - that have been infected.

IS THERE A TREATMENT?

The WHO warns that there is 'no proven treatment' for Ebola - but dozens of drugs and jabs are being tested in case of a similarly devastating outbreak.

Hope exists though, after an experimental vaccine, called rVSV-ZEBOV, protected nearly 6,000 people. The results were published in The Lancet journal.

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Spike in malaria cases threatens to derail attempts to control Ebola in DR Congo